Liriano wins fourth straight as Twins top A's

MINNEAPOLIS (Ticker) -- Francisco Liriano and the Minnesota
Twins have taken care of business at home. Now, the challenge
is whether they can take their momentum on the road.

Liriano won his fourth straight start since being recalled from
the minors and Mike Redmond had a pair of RBI singles Wednesday
afternoon as Minnesota hung on for a 3-1 victory against the
Oakland Athletics.

The Twins ran their record to 30-9 at home since June 1, and
they have won 16 of their last 19 series overall.

With the Twin Cities hosting the Republican National Convention,
the Twins are set to embark on a 15-day, 14-game road trip
beginning with a four-game series against one of the best teams
in baseball, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. It is
Minnesota's longest road trip since 1969.

"It's August, it's the 'Dog Days,'" Minnesota manager Ron
Gardenhire said. "Everyone says if you have to go out west, it
would be best to do it all in one trip. Well, we get to do it.
We'll see what happens."

The Twins play 24 of their next 30 games away from the
Metrodome. The upcoming road trip will play a large part in
determining whether Minnesota will be able to stay in the hunt
for a playoff spot. Minnesota (72-54) remained one game behind
the Chicago White Sox (73-53) in the American League Central
Division.

"All of the teams play well at home, we play well at home,
that's what you're supposed to do," Redmond said. "The teams
that go to the playoffs find ways to win on the road. It is
going to start with the pitching, but we've got to score runs
too."

A key figure to Minnesota's postseason hopes is Liriano (4-3),
who allowed one unearned run and five hits in five innings
Wednesday. The hard-throwing lefthander walked three and struck
out five.

Three relievers worked the next three innings to set up closer
Joe Nathan, who pitched a perfect ninth for his 34th save.

Since being recalled on the day after the trading deadline,
Liriano is 4-0 with a 1.14 ERA and 20 strikeouts in 23 2/3
innings. However, he was far from dominant on Wednesday,
pitching in and out of trouble throughout his outing.

Oakland had baserunners in each inning, but the Athletics could
only push across Mark Ellis in the first inning. Ellis reached
on an unlikely error by second baseman Nick Punto and scored on
an infield single by Jack Cust.

"We played pretty good today, we just lost," Oakland manager Bob
Geren said. "Every day it was a different story. Today, we
really had some chances and hit the ball good. We just didn't
get any breaks today."

The Twins also scored their leadoff hitter in the first, when
Justin Morneau's RBI single plated Denard Span. In the fifth,
Carlos Gomez had a bunt single and scored on Redmond's RBI
single.

Redmond added an insurance run in the sixth off of Athletics
starter Dallas Braden (3-3). Punto led off with his second hit,
stole second and came home on Redmond's single to center.

Braden allowed three runs and six hits in 5 2/3 innings. He
tied a career-high with seven strikeouts, but left with the
bases loaded in the sixth inning. Huston Street came on to
strike out Brendan Harris and end the threat.

"We still lost the game," Street said. "We are still trying to
win a series. We haven't done that in a long time. I take some
confidence away from it, and I am going to continue to build on
it. But winning takes care of everything. If you win, people
have to play well."

The struggles continue for Oakland, which is 6-25 since the
All-Star break, the worst mark in the majors. The Athletics
have lost their last 11 series, the longest winless streak in
club history.